AltWeeklies Wire

A River Runs Through Coyote Bonesnew

David Matysiak jokes that if Bruce Springsteen's brooding Midwestern odysseys Nebraska and The River were meant to be part of a trilogy, the third installment is Coyote Bones' Niobrara.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Chad Radford  |  11-10-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Go Phish: Hippie Music Is on the Downswing -- and That Sucksnew

Phish is and will continue to be the most vital jam band in the world -- but that title doesn't carry as much water as it used to. They're legends.
Phoenix New Times  |  Martin Cizmar  |  11-10-2009  |  Music

Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen Get Lost in the Supermarketnew

Through the magic of print and cross-referencing, we're taking this virtual shopping tour of a supermarket with the songbooks of Dylan and Springsteen as our shopping list, to see how they feel about the things that are really on the mind of the Everyman.
Metro Times  |  Serene Dominic  |  11-10-2009  |  Music

For Gucci Mane, the Quantity is the Qualitynew

He's not the best MC and he's not the worst, but Gucci Mane is crazy enough to put out four albums' worth of free material in seven days and that's good enough for me.
Chicago Reader  |  Miles Raymer  |  11-09-2009  |  Music

How Bruce Eaton Uncovered the Story of Rock's Foremost Cult Band and Their Masterpiece Albumnew

Eaton's book Big Star-Radio City proves one of the most compelling and balanced in the 33+1/3 series to date.
Artvoice  |  Donny Kutzbach  |  11-09-2009  |  Music

The Post-Britpop Bastards in Art Brut Just Want to be Understoodnew

Eddie Argos is pretty much the last person you'd look to for sincerity. But the mastermind behind England's most archly melodic power-punk band insists we've got him all wrong.
Colorado Springs Independent  |  Bill Forman  |  11-05-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Clap Your Hands Say Yeah Frontman Strikes Out on His Own with 'Mo Beauty'new

While this "solo" debut finds the Clap Your Hands Say Yeah frontman sounding comfortable and more accomplished as a singer-songwriter, the band is so excellent -- flawless, really -- that the album's only weak spots come from Alec Ounsworth himself.
Tucson Weekly  |  Eric Swedlund  |  11-04-2009  |  Reviews

Former Green on Red Guitarist Chuck Prophet Returns with a New Albumnew

Ever since he joined Green on Red 25 years ago, I've wanted to ask singer-songwriter and guitarist Chuck Prophet if he was born with that last name. He set the record straight in an interview last week. "Would I make that up?" he said, in mock offense.
Tucson Weekly  |  Gene Armstrong  |  11-04-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

The Dutchess and the Duke Break Hearts on Acoustic Stringsnew

Sunset/Sunrise is permeated by a much darker mood than the band's debut, She's the Dutchess, He's the Duke, but the follow-up succeeds by using the same simple arrangements.
SF Weekly  |  Jennifer Maerz  |  11-04-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Bop and Swing Give Way to New Percussive Influences in Jazznew

Almost no one disputes the achievements of bebop and swing percussion. The big argument today is whether that's the way jazz drumming has to sound or whether it's just one of the ways jazz drumming can sound.
Baltimore City Paper  |  Geoffrey Himes  |  11-03-2009  |  Music

Resurrecting the Dead Milkmennew

When we heard that the Dead Milkmen were officially back in the picture -- playing shows, making new music -- and blowing it out with a big Halloween bas, we gave frontman Rodney Anonymous a word count and set him free.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Rodney Anonymous  |  11-03-2009  |  Music

Nirvana: Back in 'Bleach'new

The first Nirvana album was probably the last one you heard, but it marks a critical chapter in Seattle music history. It's worth going back to for a fresh -- or first -- listen, even two decades after the fact and long after grunge was laid to rest.
Seattle Weekly  |  Chris Kornelis  |  11-02-2009  |  Music

Ha Ha Tonka Finds Something New in the Shadows of Southern Rocknew

Growing up between the Ozark Mountains and the Missouri state park the group is named after, Roberts and his bandmates in Ha Ha Tonka play a beguiling brand of post-Southern rock they've taken to calling "indie rock meets O Brother, Where Art Thou."
Colorado Springs Independent  |  Bill Forman  |  10-29-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Hip-Hop is Dead ... or Undead, Rathernew

Depraved hip-hop is the biggest thing to hit trailer-trash America since sliced meds -- and not just in redneck pockets, where rap music hardly reached before, but in suburban enclaves where acts like Twiztid and Tech N9ne sell out shows with ease.
Boston Phoenix  |  Chris Faraone  |  10-29-2009  |  Music

Leave it to a Kid from the CD Generation to Make Tapes Cool Againnew

Whitworth University's Alex Davis runs Leftist Nautical Antiques, which releases limited-edition cassette tapes, from his dorm room.
The Inlander  |  Leah Sottile  |  10-28-2009  |  Music

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